The pronunciation and word combination of "Zhi" is: pinyin fáng, and the word combination is "Hang", "No harm", "May not", "Hang", "What harm", "Huge Ke", "Hang Yu", "Hang Tu".
Zhi, a Chinese first-class character, is pronounced as fáng (fáng). Its original meaning is damage; harmful. Interpretation: Apply bright cut again, sound visit. "Han Yu's Poems of Farewell to Dou Sizhi at Yueyang Tower" caused an uproar, and the universe was narrow and obstructed. Towering over the Songhua River, it leaps vigorously.
The evolution process of Chinese characters is as follows:
1. Oracle bone inscriptions
Oracle bone inscriptions are an ancient Chinese writing, also known as deeds, oracle bone inscriptions and Yinxu inscriptions. Or tortoise shell animal bone inscriptions. The earliest mature Chinese characters we can see mainly refer to the characters inscribed on tortoise shells or animal bones used by the royal family of the late Shang Dynasty in China for divination and recording events. It is one of the earliest known systematic Shang Dynasty characters in China and East Asia. carrier.
2. Bronze Inscriptions
Bronze Inscriptions refers to the name of a calligraphy style of Chinese characters. It refers to the inscriptions cast on bronzes of the Yin, Shang and Zhou Dynasties, also called bells and tripods. The Shang and Zhou dynasties were the age of bronzes. The ritual vessels of bronzes were represented by tripods, and the musical instruments were represented by bells. "Zhongding" is synonymous with bronzes.
3. Xiaozhuan
Xiaozhuan, after Qin Shihuang unified the six kingdoms (221 BC), he implemented the policy of "writing with the same text and carriages with the same track" and unifying weights and measures, and was appointed by Prime Minister Li Si He was responsible for simplifying the large seal script originally used by the Qin Dynasty and creating a unified Chinese writing form. It was popular from the Qin Dynasty to the end of the Western Han Dynasty (about 8 AD), and was gradually replaced by official script.
4. Official script
Official script is a font of Chinese characters, including Qin Li, Han Li, etc. It is generally believed to be developed from seal script. The characters are mostly wide and flat, and the horizontal strokes are long. The short vertical paintings emphasize silkworm heads and swallow tails, twists and turns.
According to the unearthed slips, the official script was founded in the Qin Dynasty. It is said that Cheng Miao was the official. The Han official script reached its peak in the Eastern Han Dynasty. It inherited the tradition of seal script and opened up the Wei, Jin, Southern and Northern Dynasties. It played an important role in the calligraphy of later generations. Although his influence is underestimated, he is known as "Han Li Tang Kai" in calligraphy circles.
5. Cursive script
Cursive script is a font of Chinese characters, which has two meanings: broad and narrow. Broadly speaking, regardless of age, all scrawled words are counted as cursive writing. In a narrow sense, that is, as a specific font, it was formed in the Han Dynasty and evolved on the basis of official script for the convenience of writing.
6. Regular script
Kaishu, a font of Chinese characters, is also called regular script, regular script, true script, and regular script. It gradually evolved from the official script and became more simplified, horizontal and vertical. The Cihai book explains that it "has a square shape and straight strokes, which can be used as a model." This kind of Chinese character font is correct and is the modern traditional handwritten Chinese character.